@bloodline,
YAH:-D:-D:-D:-D!!!!!!!!!!
I've done it!
the earlier link to WinRAR did the trick,
so thanks to the guy who pointed that out,
though it was some effort due to the impenetrable
Wind:pissed:ws XP interface, you have to go through a maze whenever you want to switch activity,
First attempt didnt b:griping:t as it was the .tar archive!
So one further decompression via WinRAR and then
burnt :madashell: yet another CD-R (luckily I bought 10),
This time it b:lol::lol:ted!
I had to witness some ancient MSD:crazy:S screens and
then:
a Workbench with
2 icons: Ram: looking like a microchip and the CD's icon,
15.5 Meg graphics ram in the title and 236.7Meg other! :-D
:first time on this new PC that I've seen how much
ram I have!
Up till this point I had only been thinking of AROS as
source code, but here it was entirely a real interface,
It is an Amiga, it has its own flavour but it is
recognisably an Amiga,
and its a truecolour workbench because there is a
colour circle demo program showing a continuum of
colours,
its certainly a reimplementation,
it even has Prefs programmes,
I forget if it was in Prefs but I saw Zune#?
but didnt think of trying it out,
I set my keyboard repeat + delay without probs
via one of the Prefs programs,
I also changed it to a US keyboard as the
positioning of the non-alpha-numeric characters
is better thought out,
I eventually found the shell, via c:Newshell,
I changed the long shell prompt to > via c:prompt,
A lot has been done and a lot of libraries are present,
:kitty: kitty looks real in truecolour)
enough is certainly up and running to make it
worth writing programs for,
the fact that I saw a Ram: icon says that
intuition + graphics + dos + exec are done!
which for me is almost everything,
other than the #?.device's, I didnt check
which of these are done,
its going to take some time to get used to
the fact that I can now actually look at the
source code, its like a huge gate has been opened
and we can all walk in and press the buttons on
the control panels of the OS!
:I am so entrenched in the 3rd-party-developer mindset,
vs the OS-contributor mindset,
until now the OS was entirely in the hands of an elite,
who decided on our behalf,
I can already see one program I can create
by recycling existing code,
the required library being present there,
I couldnt find gcc, so I presume its on
www.aros.org, (or is it
www.aros.com?),
I think the things which are missing are
what makes the project interesting from a
programmer POV,
so its almost like you can reinvent the wheel :roflmao:
your own way,
double clicking a text file makes it automatically view,
so I double clicked s:startup-sequence,
its very cheeky because it is a real startup-sequence,
serving the real purpose but its not the official one,
Before you can write programs for AROS you will have to
check whether the required libraries are present,
anyway a lot of existing programs should port very
rapidly as the central stuff is present,
its lucky that I follow the minimalist principle when
coding, ie use the absolute minimum of external dependencies eg I strictly program within OS3.0
and cybergraphics.library,
I presume you have reimplemented cyber??
(I will find out soon enough!),
I noticed arosc.library (I think), so I presume that is
standard c things as a shared library??
this is also my first visit to amiga.org in truecolour
via internet explorer, its a totally different website
via this browser + XP,
Ibrowse is ahead in that there is an editor button
so I can edit in Memacs, also on IBrowse I can
reply to a post via "view in new browser" : where
the reply happens in an Ibrowse folder!,
so eg on Ibrowse you can open all the pages of a
thread as lots of folders, which is really useful!
:not as lots of windows but folders like in YAM,
You can tell that this is a developer driven system
in stark contrast to the kid-gloves approach of
Wind:pissed:ws XP by the fact that
it has a program PCI Tool which shows you in great
detail all sorts of PCI stuff that I dont understand,
they'd never let you see things like
that on Wind:admonish:ws XP,
I got the feeling somehow of an engineering workshop,
that people are actively making the system take shape,
I could almost smell the engine oil,
So I've just seen the little-endian Intel-AROS,
until this point that phrase was just a concept for me,
and in a way it is an OS4 on Intel and you arent
afraid to let people try it out,
will it be possible to see my PC's hard disk on screen?
It will be very revealing to look in it via Amiga:roll:S,
Anyway trying something out is so different from talking about it,
I finished the session by trying out the Amiga's
3 key reset and yes the machine reset, though
XP didnt reboot,
The close down procedure of :ak47: XP :destroy: has a reset button so
it must be possible,